Abdul-Malik, Ahmed [Tim, Jonathan] (New York, 30 Jan 1927 -
Long Branch, NJ, 2 Oct 1993)
Double bass and 'ud player
He grew up in the multiracial environment of Brooklyn,
and studied African and Middle-Eastern music as well as violin and double bass.
As a double bass player he worked with Art Blakey
(1948), Randy Weston (1954-7), Thelonious Monk
(1957-8), Herbie Mann (1961), Earl Hines (1964), and
Ken McIntyre (1971), and performed at jazz festivals in Montreux, Switzerland,
and New York. He took his Muslim
name in the mid-1950s. He played the 'ud, a Middle-Eastern
lute, on a tour of South America that was sponsored by the US State Department
(1961), and at one of the first important African jazz festivals, at Tangier,
Morocco (1972); he also recorded on this instrument with John Coltrane (1961)
and Hamiet Bluiett (1977).
From 1970 he has taught at New York University;
he also teaches in the department of African Studies at Brooklyn
College, City University of New
York. In recognition of his achievements in bringing the influence of
Middle-Eastern music to jazz, Abdul-Malik was given
Broadcast Music Inc's "Pioneer in Jazz
Award" in 1984.
Selected Recordings
As leader: Jazz Sahara (1958, Riverside
287); The Music of Ahmed Abdul-Malik (1961, New Jazz
8266); Ahmed Abdul-Malik/Sounds of Africa
(1961-2, New Jazz 8282)
As sideman: R. Weston: Get Happy with the Randy Weston
Trio (1955, Riverside 203); T. Monk: Thelonious
in Action (1957, Riverside 262); Misterioso
(1958, Riverside 279)
Bibliography
L. Feather: The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Sixties
(New York, 1966/R1984)
B. Coss: "The
Philosophy of Ahmed Abdul-Malik," Down Beat,
xxx/15 (1963), 14
John Curry
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, © Macmillan Reference Ltd
1988